Talk:Chile Genealogy

I added the "Si usted entiende español" section as a test to: (1) invite those who understand Spanish to visit the Spanish wiki -which is still in a very basic stage-, (2) recruit contributors for the Spanish wiki and (3) start linking/syncing of contents between the English and Spanish wiki for the Spanish-Speaking country pages. According to the results, other languages might think in a similar approach. (GomezFJ)

A new and better way to provide the link to the Spanish wiki is to include the {{H-langs|en=Chile|es=Chile}} that generates the "In other languages" block as seen on the bottom of the actual article (I already added it). May I suggest that you update your Spanish text to refer to that block and remove the actual link? Thomas_Lerman 02:51, 9 June 2010 (UTC)

Chile is a country located at the southwestern tip of South America. Its official name is Republic of Chile and its capital is Santiago de Chile. Chile includes a long narrow strip of land known as continental Chile, between the Pacific Ocean and the Andes, which stretches between 17 ° 29'57 S and 56 º 32 'S latitude (Islas Diego Ramírez), bordered in the north with Peru, the east by Bolivia and Argentina, and south by the Drake Passage. In addition, island territories in the Pacific Ocean, including the Juan Fernández Archipelago, Sala y Gomez, Unfortunate Islands and Easter Island (located in Polynesia), totaling an area of 755,838.7 km ². Moreover, Chile's claim over an area of 1,250,257.6 km ² of Antarctica, known as the Chilean Antarctic Territory and between the meridians 90 º and 53 º West prolonging its southern boundary to the South Pole. This claim is suspended according to the provisions of the Antarctic Treaty, without its signature constitutes a waiver. Because of its presence in South America, Oceania and Antarctica, Chile it defines itself as a tri-continental country. Its nearly 17 million average human development indices, percentage of globalization, GDP per capita, level of economic growth and quality of life, which are among the highest in Latin America.